Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019-11-11 | Use path_name for `-` to stdin/stdout translation | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -7/+5 | |
2019-11-07 | Add libbuild2/config/.gitignore with host-config.cxx | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -0/+1 | |
2019-11-07 | Initial work on path_name use for `-` to stdin/stdout translation | Boris Kolpackov | 5 | -22/+29 | |
2019-11-04 | Add support for ~host special configuration name in config.import | Boris Kolpackov | 2 | -5/+50 | |
This is the "default host configuration" that corresponds to how the build system itself was built. For example: $ b create: tools/,cc config.import=~host | |||||
2019-11-04 | Add $config.export() function | Boris Kolpackov | 7 | -73/+165 | |
This is similar to the config.export variable functionality except it can be called from within buildfiles. Note that this function can only be used during configure unless the config module creation was forced for other meta-operations with config.module=true in bootstrap.build. | |||||
2019-11-04 | Add support for configuration exporting and importing | Boris Kolpackov | 3 | -130/+244 | |
The new config.export variable specifies the alternative file to write the configuration to as part of the configure meta-operation. For example: $ b configure: proj/ config.export=proj-config.build The config.export value "applies" only to the projects on whose root scope it is specified or if it is a global override (the latter is a bit iffy but we allow it, for example, to dump everything to stdout). This means that in order to save a subproject's configuration we will have to use a scope-specific override (since the default will apply to the outermost amalgamation). For example: $ b configure: subproj/ subproj/config.export=.../subproj-config.build This could be somewhat unnatural but then it will be the amalgamation whose configuration we normally want to export. The new config.import variable specifies additional configuration files to be loaded after the project's default config.build, if any. For example: $ b create: cfg/,cc config.import=my-config.build Similar to config.export, the config.import value "applies" only to the project on whose root scope it is specified or if it is a global override. This allows the use of the standard override "positioning" machinery (i.e., where the override applies) to decide where the extra configuration files are loaded. The resulting semantics is quite natural and consistent with command line variable overrides, for example: $ b config.import=.../config.build # outermost amalgamation $ b ./config.import=.../config.build # this project $ b !config.import=.../config.build # every project Both config.export and config.import recognize the special `-` file name as an instruction to write/read to/from stdout/stdin, respectively. For example: $ b configure: src-prj/ config.export=- | b configure: dst-prj/ config.import=- | |||||
2019-10-29 | Add forward declaration header for build state types | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -2/+1 | |
2019-10-23 | Expand comment | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -2/+2 | |
2019-10-18 | Optimize config::required() to move default value if possible | Boris Kolpackov | 2 | -6/+9 | |
2019-08-28 | Add/update some module descriptions | Karen Arutyunov | 1 | -0/+5 | |
2019-08-23 | Introduce notion of build context | Boris Kolpackov | 6 | -114/+126 | |
All non-const global state is now in class context and we can now have multiple independent builds going on at the same time. | |||||
2019-08-21 | Cleanup context.hxx and its usage | Boris Kolpackov | 1 | -1/+1 | |
2019-07-24 | Use CLI-generated classes to parse testscript builtin options | Karen Arutyunov | 2 | -2/+2 | |
2019-07-24 | Move in build system module to separate library | Boris Kolpackov | 2 | -5/+11 | |
2019-07-05 | Move config, dist, test, and install modules into library | Karen Arutyunov | 9 | -0/+1920 | |